Super K with Advanced K2 Complex - (90 softgels)
An abundance of human clinical data reveals that vitamin K plays
a critical role in maintaining healthy bone density by facilitating the
transport of calcium from the bloodstream into the bone. Vitamin K is also
required by calcium-regulating proteins in the arteries. Matrix Gla-protein (MGP)
is a vitamin K-dependent protein, and it must be carboxylated to function
properly. Poor vitamin K status leads to inactive uncarboxylated MGP (ucMGP),
which accumulates at sites of arterial calcification.8 Since MGP is a potent
local inhibitor of arterial calcification, MGP is important in relation to the
health of the entire cardiovascular system. Without adequate vitamin K, calcium
in the blood can bind to the arterial wall resulting in calcification. As people
age, even a subclinical vitamin K deficiency can pose risks to the vascular
system. Poor vitamin K status also results in increased circulating levels of
undercarboxylated osteocalcin that is shown to be associated with increased bone
loss in postmenopausal women.
Humans get most of their vitamin K from green vegetables in the
form of vitamin K1. The problem is that K1 is tightly bound to plant fiber and
only a small fraction absorbs into the bloodstream.
Vitamin K2 (menaquinones) is found in meat, eggs, and dairy
products and is also made by bacteria in the human gut, which provides a certain
amount of the human vitamin K requirement.16 Human studies show that vitamin K2
is up to ten times more bioavailable than is K1. Vitamin K2 remains biologically
active in the body far longer than K1. For instance, K1 is rapidly cleared by
the liver within eight hours, whereas measurable levels of K2 have been detected
72 hours after ingestion.
The Rotterdam Heart Study, a large-scale, well-controlled
clinical trial that tracked 4,800 participants for seven years, revealed that
participants who ingested the greatest quantities of vitamin K2 in their diet
experienced a better cardiovascular condition than people who ingested the
least. High intakes of vitamin K2 also corresponded to less calcium deposition
in the aorta, whereas participants who ingested less K2 were more likely to show
moderate or severe calcification. Animal studies suggest vitamin K intake not
only blocks the progress of further calcium accumulation but also induces 37%
regression of preformed arterial calcification.
Ideal Forms of Vitamin K2
In recent years, two forms of vitamin K2 have been extensively
researched and the findings reveal vastly improved effects compared to K1. The
MK-4 form of vitamin K2 is the most rapidly absorbed and is now routinely used
in Japan to maintain healthy bone density. MK-4, however, only remains active in
the blood for a few hours. The MK-7 form of K2, on the other hand, remains
bio-available to the human body over a sustained 24-hour period and to higher
levels (7- to 8-fold) during prolonged intake. Both MK-4 and MK-7 have
demonstrated remarkable health benefits when studied in human populations.
The Most Complete Vitamin K Formula
Vitamin K1 is the form found in plants and vegetables and should
be part of most people’s daily supplement regimen. Even more important is
inclusion of the MK-4 and MK-7 forms of vitamin K2.
Based on data substantiating the long-acting effects of MK-7, it
is now possible to ingest fewer total micrograms of vitamin K but achieve far
higher sustained blood levels of this critical nutrient.
The upgraded Super K formula provides vitamin K1 and the MK-4
and MK-7 forms of vitamin K2 in just one daily softgel. The virtue of this
updated formula is that it provides the precise amount of the long-acting MK-7
form of vitamin K2 that recent human studies have shown provides optimal K2
levels over a 24-hour period. The MK-4 is included to provide the rapid increase
in vitamin K blood levels that may account for its beneficial effects in certain
studies.